THOUGHTS OF CORDLESS PHONES BY BOB KAY From The Scanning Report Monitoring Times Magazine Reprinted By: John Johnson, KWV8BP of The Hotline MBBS Dear Cordless Phone Owner: On a map of your town, draw a one mile radius circle around your home. Did you know that anyone who lives within that circle and who owns a scanner can listen to your phone calls? If you live in an urban area, there could be hundreds of people listening to your every word. The fact is that the one mile radius is rather conservative. Cordless phone signals have been moni tored at distances greater than two miles. To the average person, the idea of cordless signals traveling a distance of two miles seems rather ridiculous. After all, the advertised operating range of a cordless phone is approximately 1500 feet. And if you're a cordless owner, you know from first hand experience that your phone won't work beyond the limits of your back yard. So how can someone with a scanner radio, living several miles away, monitor your cordless phone? To answer that question you need to understand that the cordless telephone is actually a two way radio. Most people are surprised to learn that the cordless phone is nothing more than an FM walkie talkie that flings you telephone conversations in all directions. If atmospheric condi tions are favorable, cordless phone signals can travel for miles. The scanner radio that we use has the unique ability to capture, receive, and amplify a variey of weak signals. Its sensitivity to low power signals, like the ones coming out of your cordless phone, is further enhanced by the addition of an outside antenna. With the proper equipment, it's easy to monitor an entire neighborhood of low power cordless phones. Hobbyists who monitor the cordless bands quickly learn to match voices with specific frequencies. Local cordless frequencies can be cataloged in the same manner as regular phone numbers. For example: If a cordless phone is monitored on 46.610 megahertz, that particular frequency and the name of the person using it can be logged and retained in a cordless frequency book. It then becomes as easy to "tap" into a neighbor's cordless phone as it is to "punch up" his or her frequency on a scanner radio. By now you're probably wondering if it's legal to monitor cordless phones. The answer is yes. A few months ago, the Supreme Court ruled that users of cordless phones have "No justifiable expectation of privacy." Shortly thereafter, the Iowa Civil Liberties union stated that "Consumers are purch asing cordless phones at the expense of their constitutional rights." To protect yourself from uninvited eavesdroppers, it's necessary to throw your cordless phone into the closet. You only need to realize that the codless phone should be utilized as a convenience, and not as a tool. If the phone rings when you're out in the garden, it's okay to answer that call on a cordless phone. But don't discuss personal or financial matters. Simply ask the calling party to hold until you can get to a wire connected phone. However, there's more to protecting your privacy than most people realize. If you call your neghbor on a standard wire connected phone, and they answer on a cordless phone, your right ot privacy doesn't exist. Why? Because your neighbor's phone is broadcasting both sides of the conversation into the air! For total protection against uninvited listeners, use a standard wire connected phone and don't forget to ask the second party to do the same. In today's high tech society, it's the only guaranteed way of protecting your telephone privacy.... Reprinted By: The Hotline MBBS 304-736-9169 end